TRADITION 95 ® – red climbing rose – Kordes
Let the deep-red blooms of Tradition 95 ® roll like waves along a veranda balustrade or sunny garden wall, giving your coastal-style space a sense of seaside romance without demanding fussy upkeep. This large-flowered climber quickly forms a vertical curtain of colour, yet remains easy to manage in a typical family garden with simple annual tying-in and light pruning. Its own-root form favours long-term stability, steady regeneration after harsh winters, and reliable flowering year after year with only moderate care. From the first season’s quiet rooting, through stronger second-year shoots, to full third-year display, you can expect a graceful build-up of ornamental value. Semi-double, bee-tempting clusters add gentle fragrance and movement above dark, glossy foliage, while the strong red petals stand up well to sun and brisk breezes, helping the plant stay firmly anchored visually in spaces where you may be managing wind, light and drainage around exposed family homes.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small coastal veranda trellis |
Ideal where horizontal space is limited but you want impact at eye level; its climbing habit allows vertical colour without crowding pots or seating areas, especially useful for beginners seeking low-effort structure on a veranda or balcony for the busy homeowner. |
| Family garden rose arch |
Trains readily over an arch to create a welcoming entrance or play-area backdrop, with semi-double flowers that repeat well and offer a soft, not-overwhelming display, suiting households that prefer reliable beauty without advanced pruning skills for the casual gardener. |
| Sunny wall or fence in a windy spot |
Works well on a sheltered south or west-facing wall where you need a robust climber that copes with regular breezes and rainfall while providing long seasonal colour, bringing structure and privacy in typical British conditions for the coastal resident. |
| Pergola over seating area |
Can be guided along pergola beams to provide dappled shade and glowing red clusters overhead, with only moderate maintenance to remove old blooms and tie in new growth, ideal for relaxed spaces where you enjoy tea outdoors for the garden lounger. |
| Urban courtyard or mews garden |
Climbing habit makes good use of vertical surfaces in compact city plots, where strong colour and modest fragrance add character without occupying precious ground, suiting those who want a refined climber that stays manageable for the urban owner. |
| Large container by a sheltered doorway |
Can be grown in a substantial 40–50 litre container with a sturdy obelisk or trellis, giving a smart, upright feature that welcomes guests while remaining moveable and controllable, provided watering is regular for the first-time planter. |
| Mixed coastal-style border with perennials |
Partners well with airy Gypsophila or silver foliage plants, its deep red flowers rising behind lower perennials to anchor the scheme and bring structure, particularly helpful where breezy sites and rain exposure shape planting choices for the style-conscious gardener. |
| Wildlife-aware family garden corner |
Semi-double blooms with exposed stamens support foraging bees, and later rose hips add seasonal interest, allowing you to combine ornamental effect with small-scale support for pollinators in an easy-care way for the nature lover. |
Styling ideas
- Harbour-porch arch – Train Tradition 95 ® over a simple metal arch, underplant with sea kale and blue Festuca to echo a shingle shore – suited to coastal-style homeowners wanting a soft, seaside entrance.
- Crimson veranda screen – Grow it in a 50 litre container against trellis, pairing with white Gypsophila in pots for a light, lacy contrast – ideal for small verandas needing privacy without feeling boxed in.
- Wind-kissed pergola – Let stems weave along a timber pergola, soften posts with lavender and Artemisia for scent and silvery foliage – perfect for relaxed tea corners in breezy but sheltered family gardens.
- Courtyard focal wall – Fan-train against warm brick, edging the base with compact Echinacea for extended colour and pollinator appeal – for urban gardeners seeking a single strong feature with modest upkeep.
- Romantic boundary fence – Space plants along a fence for a flowering curtain, interplant with ornamental grasses to move with the wind – attractive for families wanting long-season colour framing play or seating areas.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Large-flowered climbing rose, registered as KORkeltin, marketed as Tradition 95 ® Climbing rose KORkeltin; American Rose Society exhibition name Tradition™ for show and catalogue use. |
| Origin and breeding |
German-bred climber by Tim-Hermann Kordes at W. Kordes’ Söhne; breeding completed 1995 in Germany and introduced in 1998, with parentage not recorded in available literature. |
| Awards and recognition |
Decorated with Belfast Certificate of Merit 1998, Silver Medal Kortrijk 2000, RHS Award of Garden Merit 2001, plus Bronze and Gold Medals at The Hague in 2001 and 2003 respectively. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous climbing habit to 240–380 cm high and 100–160 cm spread, densely thorned canes, moderately dense, glossy dark green foliage; requires support and light training to cover structures evenly. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped blooms with 13–25 petals, large-flowered (approximately 7–10 cm), borne mainly in clusters, remontant with a generous second flush after the main summer flowering period. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Even, radiant red blooms; dark crimson buds open vivid scarlet, later maturing to a muted purplish-red with slightly darkened margins, with colour holding reasonably well even in bright, sun-exposed positions. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, slightly sweet rose fragrance noticeable at close range but not overpowering, offering a gentle scent suitable near seating areas or paths where a subtle, refined perfume is preferred. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderately abundant, spherical red hips about 13–17 mm in diameter, adding late-season decorative value and potential food sources for wildlife once the flowering display has eased. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to around –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); disease resistance generally moderate for powdery mildew, black spot and rust, benefiting from basic preventative care in damp seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best on walls, fences, pergolas, arches and urban green structures; plant 140–270 cm apart, allow 0.4–0.5 plants/m² in massing, and use moderate maintenance with occasional deadheading and pest monitoring. |
TRADITION 95 ® offers vivid red clusters, manageable climbing growth and pollinator-friendly flowers on a durable own-root plant, making it a thoughtful choice for long-lived vertical colour in your garden.